Florian Schneider on Thu, 16 Sep 2010 21:05:11 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> ceuta and melilla: 5 years after |
Dear nettime! These days mark the 5th anniversary of what has been later coined by the mainstream media as a "storm on Fortress Europe". In deed, several hundred migrants had crossed the outer border of the European Union around the spanish enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla in a self-authorized and self-organized fashion. I take the opportunity to post a text that attempts something like a closer reading of these events and, in particular, the images that have been circulated by the spanish border police and news agencies across the globe. The text is based on the notes of a series of lectures and presentations over the past few years. It was published recently in "Uncorporate Identity" edited by Metahaven (Lars Müller Publishers). A different version will appear in german language in: "Die Kunst der Migration" edited by Marie-Hélène Gutberlet and Sissy Helff (transcript Verlag). On Friday, September 17th 2010, John Palmesino (architect and urbanist, co-founder of "Multiplicity" and "Territorial Agency") and me will enter a discussion whether the events in September 2005 might well have marked the beginning of a subtle redesign of the European outer borders. Against the backdrop of current events like the deportations of Roma in France, the question would be, how in the presence – as well as in the absence – of a scandal, new forms of participation, neutralization and caretaking become the constitutive elements of a border regime that operates beyond the patterns of inclusion and exclusion. The event is the start of BETWEEN, a new series of events at the Design department of Jan van Eyck Academie Maastricht. BETWEEN #1 takes place on Friday, 17th September at 16:00 hrs at the JVE. The session will be followed on Saturday by a presentation of the new research projects and a new call for applications in the JVE Design department. http://www.janvaneyck.nl All the very best, florian --- The scandal: notes on the autonomy of the image by Florian Schneider It is the night of the 29th September 2005. 215 men and women have made a momentous decision. Over several weeks or months they have been eking out an existence reduced to bare survival; camping in a low forest or shrubland, hiding in flimsy tents, with no access to money, food or even water. Although they came so close to the final destination of a journey full of privations, what opens up now is a reverse perspective: the longer they are standing still the further they get away from the finish. Europe, or at least the official territory of what is considered the "European Union" is only a few meters away. They have been discussing the problem in many nightly meetings. Should they take the risk and leave one night altogether or wait for a another opportunity? Should they continue to try to cross the border in small groups of at most a dozen people -- in such a low number that it does not cause a stir? The people living in the forest are well organized in small groups of 15 to 20 members. Most of them gather according to their countries of origin, but there are others who join a group of a different country. The members of a group elect a leader and these leaders again meet in counsels in order to make further decisions. The decision to cross the border in the night of the 29th of September is almost unanimously, though apparently without the consent of the elder leaders who are sometimes called "the fathers of the forest". They must have feared the scandal such a decision would cause; they were aware, at least, that such an exodus and its aftermath would dramatically change the situation in the forest. The images that were taken by the CCTV cameras of the "Guardia Civil", the Spanish border police, show dozens of people climbing with self-made ladders over the three-meter-high fence that runs along 50 kilometers of the Spanish enclave of Ceuta, a military outpost in the north of Morrocco. One can only guess how painful it must be for a human body to crawl through the barbed wire; and then one sees them jumping the three meters down, onto the road that runs between the fences. Almost everybody was hurt. Broken arms, legs and sprained ankles, injuries to the head. Seven people lost their lifes. Either they do not survive the fall into Europe or they were shot, some to death, by the border patrol's rubber bullets. The footage spread by Reuters over the next few days is a sacrilege in terms of sincere journalism. It features a nine-second sequence based on the images of the surveillance cameras, but animated in fast motion. Broadcast all around the globe, looping every hour, a dribbling voiceover gabbles about a "storming of fortress Europe". The sequence turns out to be an unintentional piece of art; and its conceptual radicalism, its determination far outstrips numerous politically engaged works presented at various biennales and exhibited in shows that deal more or less superficially with the issues of borders and migration. Instead, the border appears here in its almost perfect postmodern design: performed through a scandal, in a widely publicized incident involving allegations of wrongdoing, disgrace, and moral outrage. But what is so scandalous in these images? At first sight, the scandal relates to the collectively organized attempt to overcome the border, the self-authorized and self-organized transgression of the fence. It is a scandal in the truest sense of the word, which derives from the Latin "scandere", to climb. But there is yet another, no less compelling, etymological perspective: the border as "skandalon", which is the ancient greek word for a stumbling block. In this respect, the events of the 29th of September serve as an exquisite example of what activists and theorists of the "noborder network" have, since the early 1990s, called the "autonomy of migration". This slogan aims to understand migration as a much more complex process as if it could be reduced to misery and calamity. The patterns of victimization are as omnipresent as the ubiquitous control system. Both neoliberals and many of their adversaries understand migration as a logical result of the movements of capital, as its unsavory aftereffect or appendix. The "autonomy of migration" claims that activist strategies as well as research to be done in this field should refrain from indulging in eternally returning tropes of charity and compassion. Instead, it aims to recognize and realize the complex multitude of social and political processes needed to practically cross a border, which are, theoretically or politically, constitutive of the production of contemporary migrant subjectivities. Migration is not the action of an isolated, asocial, expelled individual. Its social and subjective dimensions appear, rather, in its autonomy and independence of the political measures that try to control it. To escape one's country of origin, to cross borders, and to seek something more somewhere else, is an eminently political act. But what happened that night had an even wider impact. The tremendous potential of exposing the redundancy of the collection of high-tech gadgets so central to the staging of technological supremacy in the border regime around Ceuta, as well as in many other critical areas around the European Union. Every few hundred meters there is a watchpost equipped with spotlights, noise and movement sensors, and videocameras that provide CCTV footage via underground cables to a central control booth. The decision of the Guardia Civil to release that footage was deliberate. Normally the public is not supposed to access it. Yet the scandal is not the release of the images; rather, it lies in fast-forwarding them. The low frame rate of the recordings of the surveillance camera is speeded up through an additional time lapse. Normally this video effect is applied in order to pronounce processes that would appear rather subtle to the human eye. The purpose is all too clear: of the 215 persons who crossed the fence that night, only a few dozen were captured in the published footage. The manipulation of the images transforms the distinct number of individuals into a swarming mass, a "storming of fortress europe" as the voiceover put it. Such undercranking epitomizes the hypocrisy of contemporary discourses about "Fortress Europe." Agency is denied to those who are seizing opportunities. Worse, the animation transforms them into animals or even insects. Their staccato, choppy movements reveal an imaginary plague that is beleaguring Europe, overrunning its outposts and fortifications. This may lead to a third notion of the scandal. According to the dictionary a scandal is usually a product of a mixture of both, real and imaginary incidents. The scandal suppresses the distinction between the real and the imaginary. It operates through unuttered laws which regulate that what is permitted to some and not permitted to others. The real movements of the bordercrossers who appear in news footage are chopped off and broken into smallest possible pieces, jerky, saccadic movements. In order to reconstruct an impression of coherence, they have to merge inseparably with the most banal, enduring imaginations and common knowledge about illegal immigration. The scandal transforms the event to solicit a moral outrage whose purpose is nothing but the reaffirmation of the border -- a border that may otherwise be invisible, disputed or disbelieved. The scandal affirms that the border is still there, still true. Its conceptual homogenization of real and imaginary reassures us, allows us to enjoy and to cooperate with the regime that relies on the frail and ineffectual facts on the ground. We can even worry about its perversions and moderately criticize its violent character. Outside of the frame of the CCTV footage, what we don't see -- and for that very reason can more easily, collectively imagine -- "modern" homogeneity on one side, and the "primitive" inarticulacy on the other, the uninterrupted continuity of colonialism and postcolonialism. Each of these three notions of the scandal are instantiated by the frame of the image as well as within the frame. The frame is the allegedly necessary homogenization of real and imaginary elements, it is the border that limits what is and is not visible, and thereby establishes what can and cannot be said. And yet there is another, a more disturbing presence, beyond the field of the image -- indeed, beyond the frame of the scandal with its subsequent homogenization of space and time. It testifies to an elsewhere: not something literally to the left or the right of the frame but, rather, the spaces where the bordercrossers are coming from and where they are going. Neither exists in the immediacy of the footage of the events; both must be negated, ignored, in the mis en scene of "Fortress Europe". Moussa K., for example: He fled from the civil war in Sierra Leone in 2003 looking for another life somewhere in Europe. Passing through Guinea-Conakry, Mauritania, and the Western Sahara, he tried to enter Spanish territory in Las Palmas; but he was caught by Moroccan police and deported to Oujda on the Moroccan-Algerian border. With some comrades he decided to try again in Ceuta. After 25 days of walking across 900 kilometers of Moroccan desert they finally reached Castillago, a small Moroccan town near the border at Ceuta, in June 2005. "We lived like animals -- it was like in a war zone," he recalls of the three months he spent in the forest near the border. On the 28th of September he decided to take part in the collective attempt to climb across the barbed wire fence and make his way into Ceuta. The slogan of the collective effort was: "No retreat, no surrender". He built his own laddar from small tree trunks and branches from the forest and succeeded -- unlike his friend, who died from police gunfire in the same crossing. A few weeks later his injuries are almost healed. He hopes to obtain a residency in Spain and then to study mining somewhere in Europe. But what is really at stake is not the relative out-of-field, such as geographical destinations, privations and longings, but the absolute nullification of any remaining subjectivity. Every one knows, if she or he knows nothing else, that the essential function of the border regime is to render innocuous any past experience of the bordercrosser let alone future desires. As soon as the border is crossed, engineers turn into cleaners, academics into sex workers, professors into casual farm laborers or domestic workers -- ready-made for over-exploitation on the informal labor markets of late capitalism. Rather than lamenting unfairness and considering himself as a victim, Moussa K. seems to understand the bordercrossing as an extreme process of desubjectivation -- in large part by living in ways that were almost unliveable. Pushed beyond the conditions and limits of what is often described as "human", his experiences become a sort of negative freedom, as Foucault might say. It radically changes the modalities of being, it opens up the potential for transformation and change in relation to oneselve and the world. It does not exist neither in the images nor in the imaginaries of the border and its regime of scandalization, it rather insists or subsists somewhere else, in an absolute out-of-the-field or "hors-champ". In his cinema books Gilles Deleuze associated this absolute out-of-field with the Bergsonian concept of "durée" or duration. Instead of measuring sequenced movements in homogenous space, he suggested a heterogenous, non-representative notion of time that is irreversible, unretrievable and undivisible -- a sometimes faster, sometimes slower flow of becoming or pure mobility. In fact, it is quite stunning what happens as soon as one renders the nine seconds sequence of the animated bordercrossers of the 29th of September back to what they themselves might have been experienced as real time. The specters which are supposed to run down fortress Europe seem to stand still, as soon as they regained a certain, sort of realistic duration. Every single image is stretched and prolonged to an almost unbearable extent. Since CCTV cameras usually run with a lower frame rate, which in that specific case was compensated by the undercranking of the video material into fast motion, any attempt to slow it down again, needs to result necessarily in an at the first sight aimless reduplication of every single original frame. But there is one exception: The only moving part of the image is the counter of the time code running smoothly from frame to frame, replacing one image with its double, metering a faked sameness and presenting every 25th part of a second as if it were enjoyable as pure time while all the content of the image is waiting for the next moment of release. And yet, a strange kind of apparition takes place, when the movement of the bordercrosses is halted for a moment that feels like infinite. The deadlock of overmediated content causes a collapse of time. It has emerged as the result of a two-folded manipulation of the footage: first a fast-forwarding for the sake of the scandal, then by reversing this time-lapse through slow-motion: a possible, ethically necessary but apparently quite arbitrary restoration of the time in which that what happened could have happened -- just for the case that it would matter at all. Rather than canceling each others out or negating itself, it comes as a surprise. The recurrence of an imagined "real time" generated by the faked slow-mo as an unlapsing of time produces new blocs of invisibility, potential hide-outs between the never-changing images, uncontrolled zones between the frames which reproduce ever the same. Paradoxically, the standstill of the image seems to open up to a new plane. Maybe as an allegory for autonomy of migration, at least it is anticipating a freedom of movement that is certainly not in place yet, nevertheless it achieves something quite impossible: The pre-emptive character of surveillance appears to no avail. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org